Ludvík Kundera awarded Seifert prize

The Czech poet, playwright and translator Ludvík Kundera was awarded this
year’s Jaroslav Seifert prize on Monday recognising his life’s work and
contribution to literature. The 89-year-old poet – a cousin of the
internationally renowned author Milan Kundera – was given the prize,
which includes 250,000 crowns in funds, at the residence of the Prague
mayor.

Ludvík Kundera, photo: CTK
Ludvík Kundera is one of the country’s most respected poets, literary
theorists, and translators, whose work is most closely associated with
Surrealism and the avant garde. Still writing at the age of 89, the poet,
who published his first book of poetry in 1946, Demons in Us, suffered many
difficult moments throughout his long career. In particular: not being
allowed under the Communists to publish or having to work clandestinely in
theatre. On Monday he spoke to Czech Radio and discussed life under the
former regime.

“It wasn’t easy for poets or artists or ordinary people on the wrong
side of the regime, especially if you had kids. It wasn’t that they
focussed on you, but that they targeted your wife, children, and relatives.
This is what was so malicious. Of course in the 1950s, there were
executions, but here people were worn away by the regime. The state
apparatus didn’t even have to ban you outright: things worked through all
kinds of secret phone calls and information: you couldn’t know where you
stood, but you knew you were on the outside.”

Nevertheless, Mr Kundera says he was lucky: inspired by other poets, good
teachers, friends and contemporaries.

Ludvík Kundera, photo: CTK“Three of us were close friends, in constant contact. Emil Juriš,
František Listopad and myself. We kept in touch mostly through letters.
When I was banned from publishing I worked in secret as artistic director
for the theatre in Zlín, then Gottwaldov. The theatre was named the
Theatre of the Working People and we used to joke ‘Where is the theatre
for unemployed people?’ I met a lot of people on different jobs and
surprisingly no one denounced me.”

After the fall of Communism, Ludvík Kundera taught at universities both
at home and abroad and he has continued to publish with the Brno-based
publisher Atlantis.